FILE - In this Dec. 20, 2015, file photo, Miami Dolphins head coach Joe Philbin watches during warm ups before an NFL football game against the San Diego Chargers in San Diego. The Green Bay Packers have rehired Joe Philbin as offensive coordinator, hoping he can bring another Super Bowl championship to Green Bay, the team announced Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2018. Philbin is a former Miami Dolphins head coach, but he also spent 2007-11 as Green Bay's offensive coordinator. In that time, the Packers won the Super Bowl after the 2010 season. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 3, 2016, file photo, Cleveland Browns head coach Mike Pettine watches during the second half of an NFL football game against the Pittsburgh Steelers in Cleveland. The Green Bay Packers have hired Pettine as defensive coordinator, the team announced Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2018. Pettine is a veteran defensive coordinator who also was head coach in Cleveland from 2014-15. (AP Photo/David Richard, File)

Green Bay Packers bring back Philbin to run offense

Jan. 24, 2018

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — A familiar face on offense and a fresh voice on defense headline the changes to Green Bay Packers coach Mike McCarthy's revamped staff in the wake of the team's first losing season since 2008.

Joe Philbin, a Packers assistant from 2003 until 2012, was hired Wednesday as offensive coordinator, a job he held for his final five seasons before being named the Miami Dolphins' head coach in January 2012. On defense, the Packers tabbed Mike Pettine, the ex-Cleveland Browns head coach who built successful defenses with the New York Jets and Buffalo Bills but was largely out of football the last two years, serving as a consultant with the Seattle Seahawks in 2017.

McCarthy has also installed run- and pass-game coordinators on each side of the ball. On defense, former cornerbacks coach Joe Whitt was promoted to pass-game coordinator, while new inside linebackers coach Patrick Graham will serve as the run-game coordinator. On offense, longtime offensive line coach James Campen will be the run-game coordinator, while new hire Jim Hostler, who coached wide receivers with Philbin in Indianapolis the past two seasons, will serve as the pass-game coordinator.

It's all part of a staff overhaul that was the biggest of McCarthy's tenure as he enters his 13th season as head coach.

"It's like Year 1," McCarthy said in introducing the new staff. "Not only is the defense building a new playbook, so are we on the offense. We're tightening that approach. And it's been great. You have new input, you have new experiences that are in the room. You have a different way of saying the same thing. It's been exciting. The energy is over the top."

The changes come on the heels of a 7-9 season in which two-time NFL MVP quarterback Aaron Rodgers missed 10 games with a broken right collarbone. It marked the end of an eight-year streak of playoff appearances - the longest in franchise history - and led to defensive coordinator Dom Capers, offensive coordinator Edgar Bennett and multiple position coaches being let go.

This is the first time McCarthy has changed both the offense and defensive coordinator in the same year. The seven new staffers are the most since Capers and an almost entirely new defensive staff arrived in 2009.

For Philbin, returning to the Packers was a matter of timing. On Jan. 8, 2012, his 21-year-old son, Michael, drowned in the icy Fox River near the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh campus.

"It's very, very emotional for all of us," Philbin said of returning to Green Bay, roughly an hour north of where his son's body was found. "But we care and love a lot of people here, and a lot of people care about and love us. So it's not easy, but this is what's so special about Green Bay. Ultimately you want to contribute, you want to help people you care about and want to be with. At the end of the day, that I feel very good about when I put my head down at night."

In Pettine, the Packers have a coordinator whose defenses have never finished out of the top 10. And after going 10-22 in two seasons in Cleveland, Pettine made it clear he is not taking the job so he can become a head coach again.

"When I was the head coach, I didn't enjoy the lack of interaction with the actual football part of it," Pettine said. "I always made the comparison, it was going from being the teacher to now you're the principal. . And I didn't like it. I missed the camaraderie of the room, the interaction with the staff, the interaction with the players. The chess-game part of it - the designing a game plan tailored to your opponent."

The Packers have not had a top-flight defense since 2010, when they last won the Super Bowl.

"We're going to be prepared. It's about paying attention to detail," Pettine said. "There's no magical (formula). People talk about scheme, what kind of playbook - that's a very small part of playing great defense. ... (When) you look at us, you're going to see we're going to be multiple and we're going to be aggressive."